Section136
Well-Known Member
I imagine Kirk is pretty hands off...he's the one that makes the kill the clock decisions sure....but in drive decisions? nah.
No sense in going back and forth. Will just leave it at this.
I imagine Kirk is pretty hands off...he's the one that makes the kill the clock decisions sure....but in drive decisions? nah.
I would also add that it seems like our offense can usually seem to move the ball between the 20's.. Yet it just seems like there's typically a point where things break down.. A big penalty, a sack, KOK goes away from what was working and the drive stalls, etc. We end up with a FG, or going for it (and failing) on 4th down from the opponents 33 yard line, or something.
Like the game @Minnesota this year.. Coker had a HUGE first half, and our offense only managed 7 points. Inexplicable.
If there is a coaching change won't be much philosophy change ImO
Or waaaay too many sequences of 1st and 10, 2nd and 8, 3rd and 5+ and then it is punt the football or the drive stalls. If Iowa did not get good chunks of yardage on 1st or 2nd down you cringed because you knew what was coming.
It was just no wiggle room or margin of error with this offense.
Or waaaay too many sequences of 1st and 10, 2nd and 8, 3rd and 5+ and then it is punt the football or the drive stalls. If Iowa did not get good chunks of yardage on 1st or 2nd down you cringed because you knew what was coming.
It was just no wiggle room or margin of error with this offense.
Herby get me Kens email asap.
Sounds like lack of execution to me. Granted, that could still be KOK's fault, but I've never thought play calling was the issue.
And how many times do we see this sequence:
1st and 10: Incomplete Pass
2nd and 10: Hand off, 2 yard gain
3rd and 8: Pass for 5 yards (or sack) and punt
lack of execution is a fair argument.
I'm in the camp that believes KF sets the philosophy, but that KOK operates poorly within the parameters he is given.
My guess at the parameters KF gives KOK:
1) Pro-style
2) Run-first offense
3) Use the run to set up play action
4) Keep it conservative (not too many trick plays, plays that might result in negative yardage, etc)
But just because those parameters won't change with a new OC, that doesn't mean someone else can't do a better job within the same parameters. Here's some things that KOK is directly responsible for that can be improved:
1) Getting play calls in quicker
2) Better clock management (you can argue that this is KF's weakness, but a good OC knows when a time-out should be called and calls it)
3) Preparing the QB to deal with pressure/blitzes
4) Finding plays work and continuing to use them; then at the right moment, using them to set up a fake/counter/variation
I, for one, would like to see a new OC. Maybe nothing will change. Maybe everything will. I feel like there's more potential to get better than to get worse.
It's easy to blame the offense's troubles on lack of execution, and that may well be accurate. But after every loss where the offense struggles, we always hear "We just didn't execute well enough".
Ok, fine.
But eventually, you have to ask "Why does the offense seem to continually have so much trouble executing?"
Lack of ability to recruit talent to Iowa City. Iowa just doesn't have any sizzle .... its not sexy. They can only do so much with the talent that they have.
I believe that was what Kirk's explanation was.
The only flaw with that argument is that it doesn't really explain why we pretty typically have a Top-15 (sometimes better) defense.
Unless the staff is doing a better job of recruiting talent to that side of the ball, and/or developing it.
That was the subtext of my sarcastic comment.